Thursday, 10 January 2013

Billy Hallowell - THIS IS HOW A SECRET GUN PROVISION MADE ITS WAY INTO OBAMACARE LEGISLATION

TheBlaze

http://www.theblaze.com/stories/this-is-how-a-secret-gun-provision-made-its-way-into-obamacare-legislation/

THIS IS HOW A SECRET GUN PROVISION MADE ITS WAY INTO OBAMACARE LEGISLATION

Obamacare Legislation Includes Secret Gun Rights Provision | Harry Reid, Affordable Care Act

Credit: Getty Images

There’s a widely-unknown provision in the Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare) — legislative wording that is capturing attention in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. Pushed by the National Rifle Association (NRA), a newly-noticed regulation that was placed deep within the bill back in 2010, among other things, bans doctors from documenting patients’ answers to questions that focus upon guns.

The Washington Post first reported on Dec. 30 about the presence of this controversial wording. Under a section with the headline “Protection of Second Amendment Gun Rights,” the NRA-advocated wording is nestled deep within the law. The Post called the inclusion, “a largely overlooked but significant challenge to a movement in American medicine to treat firearms as a matter of public health.”

As the outlet also noted, it was in the final stretch of the debate over Obama’s health care legislation that the NRA successfully pushed to insert this language. Below, see the portions of the Affordable Care Act that include mentions of firearms and the parameters through which doctors must operate in questioning patients (read the entire health care bill here):

Obamacare Legislation Includes Secret Gun Rights Provision | Harry Reid, Affordable Care Act

Obamacare Legislation Includes Secret Gun Rights Provision | Harry Reid, Affordable Care Act

On Tuesday, CNN chief medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta spoke on-air with “Situation Room” host Wolf Blitzer. The two discussed how the gun provision made its way into health care legislation, while also explaining portions of the text for viewers.

Gupta noted that the initiative to have the wording included during the contentious health care debate was rooted in the NRA’s stance that patients should not be penalized or discriminated against for owning firearms. As can be seen from the above portion of the legislation, while doctors are not banned from asking about guns, they are forbidden from documenting the information and using it for research purposes.

Barrio Planta Project, an amazing organization in San Juan Del Sur, Nicaragua

http://gwapaproject.org/get-involved/

 

GET INVOLVED

 

 

 

2013 is a big year for us!

We’re planning our very first project as an organization to work with the Barrio Planta Project, an amazing organization in San Juan Del Sur, Nicaragua that educates the kids in the city’s poorest community with an emphasis on arts and English as a second language. We’ll be onsite to lend our production and media skills to this awesome youth organization and their Winter Arts Workshop’s production of “Grease.” This annual program of over 100 children gives them a valuable creative and disciplined outlet during their school vacation and we are enthusiastic to that we get the chance to bring our talents to the community of San Juan del Sur. For more information about BPP: www.barrioplantaproject.org

Donate Now

 

Your donations will help us accomplish:

• Gwapa Project members will teach a variety of workshops (English/Spanish) to the children in
video production, set/costume design, theater lighting, yoga, and social media
• Gathering costumes, set materials, art supplies, and musical instruments and bringing them
down to San Juan del Sur
• Creating high quality videos, photos, and other publicity materials for BBP and to help promote their program internationally

Since this is our first project and timing is tight for the show, we need to fundraise the good ol’ fashioned way. We have until Monday, January 21st to fundraise $3,000. We’re well on our way, having raised almost $600 already. But we still have about $2k left to go and we need your help to get there!

Please donate in any increment, $5, $50, $500–we won’t stop you OR  any in-kind donations to
help us help the kids of San Juan Sur put on their best show yet!

Do you have any of the following to share with our project? Really? No way! Please send an email to INFO@GWAPAPROJECT.ORG.

  • Circle Skirts
  • Short Sleeve Blouses
  • Scarves
  • T-shirts
  • Sunglasses
  • Art Supplies (Glitter, Markers, etc.) & Fabric
  • Musical Instruments

We thank everyone in advance for your support!

With Love, The Gwapa Team

 

Donate Now

http://gwapaproject.org/get-involved/

BBC - As much as half of the world's food, amounting to two billion tonnes worth, is wasted, a UK-based report has claimed.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20968076

BBC

Half of all food 'wasted' report claims

Wasted food in a binThe report said half the food bought in Europe and the US ended up in the bin

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As much as half of the world's food, amounting to two billion tonnes worth, is wasted, a UK-based report has claimed.

The Institution of Mechanical Engineers said the waste was being caused by poor storage, strict sell-by dates, bulk offers and consumer fussiness.

The study also found that up to 30% of vegetables in the UK were not harvested because of their physical appearance.

The institution's Dr Tim Fox said the level of waste was "staggering".

'Waste of resources'

The report said that between 30% and 50% of the four billion tonnes of food produced around the world each year went to waste.

It suggested that half the food bought in Europe and the US was thrown away.

Dr Fox, head of energy and environment at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, said: "The amount of food wasted and lost around the world is staggering. This is food that could be used to feed the world's growing population - as well as those in hunger today.

"It is also an unnecessary waste of the land, water and energy resources that were used in the production, processing and distribution of this food.

"The reasons for this situation range from poor engineering and agricultural practices, inadequate transport and storage infrastructure through to supermarkets demanding cosmetically perfect foodstuffs and encouraging consumers to overbuy through buy-one-get-one-free offers."

And he told the BBC's Today programme: "If you're in the developing world, then the losses are in the early part of the food supply chain, so between the field and the marketplace.

"In the mature, developed economies the waste is really down to poor marketing practices and consumer behaviour."

Population growth

The report - Global Food; Waste Not, Want Not - also found that huge amounts of water, totalling 550 billion cubic metres, were being used to grow crops that were never eaten.

The institution said the demand for water for food production could reach 10 to 13 trillion cubic metres a year by 2050.

The United Nations predicts there will be an extra three billion mouths to feed by 2075 as the global population swells to 9.5 billion.

Dr Fox added: "As water, land and energy resources come under increasing pressure from competing human demands, engineers have a crucial role to play in preventing food loss and waste by developing more efficient ways of growing, transporting and storing foods.

"But in order for this to happen governments, development agencies and organisation like the UN must work together to help change people's mindsets on waste and discourage wasteful practices by farmers, food producers, supermarkets and consumers."

More on This Story

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Sunday, 6 January 2013

Petitioning Pranab Mukherjee President, CJI: Stop Rape Now! - change.org

http://www.change.org/petitions/president-cji-stop-rape-now

 Signed

with 352,176 supporters

147,824 NEEDED

President, CJI: Stop Rape Now!

President, CJI: Stop Rape Now!

Namita Bhandare

Petition by

Namita Bhandare

New Delhi, India

 

The gang-rape of a 23-year-old student in a moving bus on the night of December 16 in the capital city of Delhi has triggered anger, outrage and shock amongst every citizen this country.

The National Crime Records Bureau records 572 rapes reported from Delhi for the year 2011. This year 635 rapes had already been reported as of December 15, 2012, Rape is not a problem that afflicts Delhi alone. In recent months, we have seen a rising crime graph against women being reported from virtually every corner of the country including Haryana, Kerala and Bangalore.

Each time a rape is reported, civil society reacts with anger and outrage, which unfortunately dies down and is forgotten, until the next time. The question to ask: what is the inflexion point? At what stage do we say collectively and in one voice: Enough. 

Many solutions have been offered in the light of this particular gang-rape and in the past. Some of these include: 

1. The setting up of fast track courts (as in Rajasthan recently) to ensure speedy trials. 
2. The imposition of maximum, exemplary sentence. 
3. The immediate clearing of all pending cases involving crimes against women. 
4. Immediate training and sensitisation of police force to crimes against women, including domestic violence, molestation and sexual assault. 
5. The immediate passage of pending bills that seek to protect women, including the Protection of Women Against Sexual Harassment at the Workplace Bill 2012 and the Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill 2012 
6. Consultations with the Ministry of Human Resources to see how best to address the issue of sensitising boys through the school curriculum. 
7. National-level, open consultations involving civil society and other stake-holders on how best to tackle the growing misogyny and hostility against women as well as rising crimes against them.

Despite having so many women in positions of political leadership, a survey by TrustLaw found India to be ranked as the worst country in the world for women. At a time when women are increasingly claiming their rightful share of half the sky and asserting their autonomy and independence, the rising crimes against them are conducted with absolute impunity by criminals who have no fear of the law. 

We are writing to you in the hope that you will direct government and judiciary to take special note of the escalation of gender violence and work together on a priority basis to implement the measures detailed above. 

Lack of gender justice, lack of fear of the law, police and judicial apathy, failure of governance and shrinking public spaces is a matter of grave concern, not just for women but for every citizen of this country.

To: 
Pranab Mukherjee, President of India 
Chief Justice of India, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India 
The gang-rape of a 23-year-old student in a moving bus on the night of December 16 in the capital city of Delhi has triggered anger, outrage and shock amongst every citizen this country.

The National Crime Records Bureau records 572 rapes reported from Delhi for the year 2011. This year 635 rapes had already been reported as of December 15, 2012, Rape is not a problem that afflicts Delhi alone. In recent months, we have seen a rising crime graph against women being reported from virtually every corner of the country including Haryana, Kerala and Bangalore.

Each time a rape is reported, civil society reacts with anger and outrage, which unfortunately dies down and is forgotten, until the next time. The question to ask: what is the inflexion point? At what stage do we say collectively and in one voice: Enough. 

Many solutions have been offered in the light of this particular gang-rape and in the past. Some of these include: 

1. The setting up of fast track courts (as in Rajasthan recently) to ensure speedy trials. 
2. The imposition of maximum, exemplary sentence. 
3. The immediate clearing of all pending cases involving crimes against women. 
4. Immediate training and sensitisation of police force to crimes against women, including domestic violence, molestation and sexual assault. 
5. The immediate passage of pending bills that seek to protect women, including the Protection of Women Against Sexual Harassment at the Workplace Bill 2012 and the Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill 2012 
6. Consultations with the Ministry of Human Resources to see how best to address the issue of sensitising boys through the school curriculum. 
7. National-level, open consultations involving civil society and other stake-holders on how best to tackle the growing misogyny and hostility against women as well as rising crimes against them.
8. Ensuring safe public transport for all citizens by installing CCTVs and conducting due diligence of employees including bus drivers, cleaners etc. 

Despite having so many women in positions of political leadership, a survey by TrustLaw found India to be ranked as the worst country in the world for women. At a time when women are increasingly claiming their rightful share of half the sky and asserting their autonomy and independence, the rising crimes against them are conducted with absolute impunity by criminals who have no fear of the law. 

We are writing to you in the hope that you will direct government and judiciary to take special note of the escalation of gender violence and work together on a priority basis to implement the measures detailed above.

Lack of gender justice, lack of fear of the law, police and judicial apathy, failure of governance and shrinking public spaces is a matter of grave concern, not just for women but for every citizen of this country.

Sincerely, 
[Your name]

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